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If you do the grocery shopping for your family, you may have noticed a new word popping up on food labels: bioengineered.

You may have also seen a new symbol that looks unfamiliar, leaving many consumers wondering:

What does “bioengineered” actually mean – and how is it different from GMO?

As a food scientist with a PhD, I see a lot of confusion around this topic.

In this article, I’ll clearly explain the difference between bioengineered foods vs. GMO, why the terminology changed, and how you can tell if a food you’re eating falls into either category.

What Are Bioengineered Foods?

What are bioengineered foods infographic

In the United States, bioengineered foods are defined by law — not by marketing.

Under the National Bioengineered Food Disclosure Law, a bioengineered food is one that:

Contains detectable genetic material that could not be produced through conventional breeding or found in nature.

This definition is very specific. For a food to be labeled bioengineered, scientific testing must be able to detect modified genetic material (DNA) in the final product.

This law was signed in 2016, and mandatory compliance began on January 1, 2022. Food manufacturers knew for years that this change was coming.

GMO vs. Bioengineered Foods: The Key Difference

gmo vs bioengineered foods

This is where most confusion happens.

GMO (Genetically Modified Organism)

The term GMO is broader and more general. According to commonly used definitions (including the Non-GMO Project):

  • A GMO is any organism whose genetic material has been altered in a lab

  • It includes many genetic engineering techniques

  • It also includes products derived from genetically modified organisms

Read more: Here’s the Genetically Modified (GM) Foods You Probably Eat

Bioengineered Foods (Legal Definition)

In contrast, bioengineered foods:

  • Must contain detectable genetically modified DNA

  • Are defined only by what can be measured in the final food

  • Exclude many foods commonly thought of as “GMOs”

Bottom line:
All bioengineered foods are GMOs, but not all GMO foods are considered bioengineered under U.S. law.

Real-World Examples: Bioengineered vs. GMO

Bioengineered vs. GMO foods labels

Let’s make this concrete.

Example 1: Soybean Oil

  • Most soybeans grown in the U.S. are genetically modified

  • Soybean oil comes from GMO soybeans

  • However, the oil is highly refined

  • No detectable DNA remains

GMO? Yes
Bioengineered? No

Because the genetic material cannot be detected, soybean oil is not legally classified as bioengineered.

Example 2: Beef from Cows Fed GMO Feed

  • A cow eats genetically modified alfalfa

  • The cow’s meat does not contain detectable DNA from the feed

GMO (by some definitions)? Yes
Bioengineered? No

Feeding animals GMO feed does not make the resulting meat bioengineered under U.S. law.

How to Tell If a Food Is Bioengineered

The National Bioengineered Food Disclosure Law requires food producers to disclose bioengineered status in one of four ways:

1. Text on the Label

You may see:

  • “Contains bioengineered ingredients”

  • “Bioengineered food”

2. Bioengineered Food Symbol

A standardized symbol appears near the ingredient list.

3. QR Code

Scanning the QR code takes you to a webpage disclosing bioengineered status.

4. Phone Number or Text Line

Consumers can call or text for disclosure information.

Important note:
Manufacturers do not have to tell you which ingredient is bioengineered — only whether the food is or is not bioengineered overall.

This is why it’s technically called a disclosure law, not a labeling law.

Why Use the Term “Bioengineered” Instead of GMO?

Bioengineered foods

This is a question I get often.

While I wasn’t in the legislative hearings, from a scientific and policy standpoint, there are two likely reasons:

  1. The term GMO carries emotional and political baggage

  2. A new term allowed lawmakers to create a precise, measurable definition

“Bioengineered” gave regulators tighter control over exactly what must be disclosed, based on detectability rather than origin alone.

Exemptions and Loopholes You Should Know About

Like most food laws, there are exemptions.

1. Threshold Allowance

Up to 5% of an ingredient may be bioengineered if:

  • It is technically unavoidable

  • It was unintentionally introduced

2. Meat, Poultry, and Eggs

If meat, poultry, or eggs are the first ingredient, the product is regulated under different USDA statutes and does not follow this rule.

3. Small Food Producers

The law primarily targets large manufacturers. Exempt businesses include:

  • Restaurants

  • Food trucks

  • Cafeterias

  • Small-scale producers

Are Bioengineered Foods Safe?

Yes — based on the best available science.

Both the FDA and the National Academy of Sciences have found no evidence that bioengineered foods are:

  • Unsafe

  • Worse for human health

The National Academy of Sciences conducted extensive reviews examining:

  • Allergies

  • Autism prevalence

  • Gut microbiota

  • Long-term health outcomes

No credible evidence links bioengineered foods to harm.

Final Thoughts: Bioengineered Foods vs. GMO

The difference between bioengineered foods vs. GMO comes down to detectability, not fear or marketing.

  • GMO is a broad scientific concept

  • Bioengineered is a legal labeling category

  • Many GMO-derived foods will never carry a bioengineered label

Understanding this distinction helps you make informed decisions — without unnecessary confusion.

If this article helped clarify things, let me know in the comments. And if you still have questions, I’m always happy to break down the science.

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